
Aggies Knocked Out of Tournament by Top-Seeded Huskies
Mar 21, 2009 | Men's Basketball
March 21, 2009
Postgame Press Conference Transcript 
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jim Calhoun returned to his regular seat on the bench and led Connecticut to a familiar spot in the round of 16.
A.J. Price scored 27 points, Jeff Adrien had 23 and Connecticut dominated Texas A&M from the opening tip in a 92-66 victory on Saturday, putting the Huskies in the round of 16 for the 12th time under their Hall of Fame coach.
After getting treatment for dehydration and missing Connecticut's first-round game, Calhoun came back and never had to worry. The Huskies scored the first 10 points and kept pulling away.
Stanley Robinson had 12 points for the top-seeded Huskies (29-4), who will play the Washington-Purdue winner in the West Region semifinals in Glendale, Ariz.
Bryan Davis and Donald Sloan led overmatched Texas A&M with 12 points. The ninth-seeded Aggies (24-10) were knocked out by the top seed in the second round for the second straight tournament.
Calhoun appeared a bit more subdued as he sat on the bench. He barked at the refs a couple of times, but otherwise stuffed his hands in his pockets and strolled the bench area like he was talking a walk in the park.
The Huskies rediscovered their swagger and attitude that vaulted them to the top of the Big East standings and The Associated Press poll earlier this season, making this win an easy one.
UConn broke away at the start with a collection of mid-range jumpers and 3-pointers. They didn't need much from Hasheem Thabeet to beat the Aggies - the 7-foot-3 center, a co-player of the year in the Big East Conference, never even touched the ball on offense until midway through the first half. He took just two shots in the game and finished with six points.
Texas A&M coach Mark Turgeon said he was going to use Philadelphia's most inspirational fictional character to rally the Aggies.
He may have used Rocky, but Connecticut had Adrien.
Adrien scored the first bucket of the game, then blocked A&M's first attempt. He grabbed a missed jumper and swung his two elbows, startling a couple of Aggies. Three possessions later, Price worked the ball in the lane to Adrien for a thunderous and uncontested dunk.
The Aggies called their first timeout only a minute into the game, and Turgeon played Calhoun's role as the cranky coach. He badgered the officials and was finally whistled for a technical on a foul call with 9:58 left in the first half. Price made two for the T and Thabeet swished his two and it was 22-8.
Price didn't even attempt UConn's first 3 until almost 9 minutes were left in the half. He made it, of course.
The Aggies made their first 10 shots in their first-round win against BYU, but missed their first five in this one. When Derrick Roland finally hit a jumper, it was already 10-2.
Texas A&M's 10th basket came with 2:03 left in the half.
Price helped the Huskies pull away in a sizzling stretch to close the first 20 minutes. He hit a pull-up 3 pointer, scored a layup off a turnover, then nailed another 3 that made it 46-22.
The second half was academic, simply a time for UConn to pad its stats and put the finishing touches on their second straight NCAA win.
Adrien and Price shot a combined 19-for-32 from the floor. Adrien didn't come out until 2 minutes were left and Price followed at the 1:30 mark and the Huskies up 26.
POST GAME QUOTES
THE MODERATOR: We're joined by Texas A&M student-athletes and  Coach Mark Turgeon. We'll ask coach to make an opening statement. 
  COACH  TURGEON: Too big, too fast, too good. They played great. We were a  little intimidated early. We didn't do what we were supposed to do  early and got behind. I thought they were great and we weren't as good  as we're capable of being, so... 
  THE MODERATOR: Questions for the student-athletes.
Q. Josh, coach just talked about how he thought y'all were intimidated early. Why do you feel that is? 
  JOSH  CARTER: I don't think we were intimidated. Just, I mean, we didn't come  out and play well. Coach did a great job of giving us a game plan  defensively and offensively. We just didn't execute well. And that's  what it came down to.
Q. Donald, same thing for you? 
  Donald Sloan: You know, I just  echo what Josh said. I agree totally. You know, think our guys came out  with a few butterflies. Big game, big stage. You know, we pretty much  shot fast, didn't execute to our highest abilities. 
  But, you know, I don't think guys were just intimidated nor scared.
Q. How good is that UConn team? Are they one of the best you've seen or other teams in the Big 12 similar to them? 
  JOSH  CARTER: I think they're a great team. They did a lot of things well. I  mean, I give credit to them. They did a great job. But we also had a  lot of open looks we didn't knock down. Shots we usually make at a high  rate, we just didn't get it done today. 
  Give credit to their defense, as well.
Q. Donald, can you talk a little bit about the trouble you had containing Price today. 
  DONALD  SLOAN: It all came down to ball screens. He used them pretty well. We  tried this, tried that. He just found ways around it somehow, whether  he was making other guys -- putting them in a position to score, or he  was doing the scoring, coming off the ball screens. 
  He got kind of  got through the course of the game at one point in time. But, you know,  he's a good guard, so, you know, I didn't expect any less from him. But  I felt we could have contained him a little better. That's about it.
Q. Josh, seven of nine wins to close out the season. Could you talk about how y'all would consider this a successful season. 
  JOSH  CARTER: I mean, I'm sure I'll look back on it later on and think about  it as a successful season. But just right now, it just hurts. It's hard  to think about, I mean, all the success we had at this point in time. 
  But, I mean, we made a good run to get here. But came up short. Just didn't play well today.
Q. Josh, how are you going to look back on these four years? 
  JOSH  CARTER: I was just thinking about that out there. It's been a good four  years. But it's just hard to swallow today. I mean, my team expects me  to make shots and things like that. And they put me in great situations  today. I didn't get it done. And to know I'll never have a chance to  redeem myself with these guys, get them another win or something like  that is just hard to swallow right now.
Q. Donald, same question for you in terms of it being a successful season. 
  DONALD  SLOAN: Well, like Josh said, we fought to get to this point. At the  beginning we weren't even mentioned being in the picture. We fought to  get to where we at. Obviously I'm not happy right now. But, you know,  the things we've done all season long has brought us closer, made us a  better team to even get to this point. I have to say for that it's been  pretty good. Right now, knowing that the season is over, a couple plays  of executing well, a couple stops, a couple defensive rebounds, we're  still playing. 
  But we didn't get it done today. That's pretty much  what you're thinking about. You're not really thinking about what we've  done two months ago, three months ago, so...
Q. Donald, you pretty much have the whole team back next year. Does that give you confidence you can build on this?
  DONALD  SLOAN: Yeah. We got a lot of young guys that played tremendous all  year. You know, to have as many guys as we have coming back next year,  you know, it will be special, it will be a pretty good team. But  couldn't get it done this year. Hopefully, next year it will be a lot  better. 
  THE MODERATOR: Thank you, guys. We'll continue with questions for COACH TURGEON.
Q. Was that the worst possible way to start a game that you could  have envisioned? Did you feel a little bit like the BYU coach against  you guys the last two years? 
  COACH TURGEON: I know what I thought. I don't know what he felt like. 
  We  didn't expect that. We expected to give them a good game and we  expected to win today. You know, we came out the first possession and  guarded the first ball screen wrong, and I knew something was the  matter. And then we just totally -- offensively we worked on some  things to get some movement in our offense. We stood around, in the  post, took a quick timeout. I thought we were going to get better at  that point, but we didn't. Came down to we just could not guard them.  We couldn't guard them. We could never put anything together because we  could never get a stop. 
  We had a couple chances to cut it to 10 or  whatever. But we just couldn't guard 'em. But, you know, after the  first five or six minutes, I thought we executed pretty well. We did  shoot a little bit too quick. We talked about that. You're trying to  come back in one possession, and you can't do that. I thought our  execution was pretty well. 
  We didn't play well. But I think they had a lot to do with it.
Q. Talking about UConn without Jerome Dyson being a national championship team. How do they look as a title contender?
  COACH  TURGEON: If they keep playing like they have the last two games. I  don't think I've played a team like them since I've been at Texas  A&M, played some good teams when we were at Wichita. Shooting the  ball like that, that Price is in total control of the game. He's  dictating the whole game out there offensively and defensively. And the  thing that I was -- I was really impressed offensively how hard they  are to guard. They're just so hard to guard. I didn't think they'd be  that hard to guard. Then you have the big fellow in the back blocking  shots. 
  If they can continue to shoot two to one free throws like that for the rest of the year, that gives them a good chance. 
  I definitely think they have a chance to be a national champion.
Q. You mentioned you weren't age to guard them. Is that because they were that good?
  COACH  TURGEON: Well, we haven't been the best defensive team. Our teams  usually guard. We weren't great defensively this year. We were good. We  weren't great. And I kept urging the guys down the stretch, when we  started to win games down the stretch, that we have to get better  defensively. And we did get better. It was a combination of us and it  was a combination of them. 
  They made some tough shots today. When  Adrien is hitting the shots he was hitting, we knew he could make those  shots, we had to give him something, they're really hard to guard.  Their two seniors were obviously really good today. But it was a  combination of them being really good offensively and us just not being  very good.
Q. With the way the first 20 minutes went, what do you try to tell a team at the half to get them going?
  COACH  TURGEON: Well, the thing I told them at halftime is the thing I'm most  proud about this team is we've fought all year. You can think at  Kansas, we didn't play well, okay? KU had something to do with it, but  we were a little dead, never made a run on Kansas. And I just said,  Guys, there's no quitting in us. No one's going to hang their head.  We're going to keep playing. If I hang my head, say something to me. We  started out pretty well. We just couldn't get a stop. I think if we  just could have put two or three stops together, we could have put a  little pressure on them. There was no pressure on them all day. They  were up 20 all day. Like us against BYU, no pressure on us offensively,  so you were loose shooting the ball. Really surprised we never made a  run. That's a credit to them, how good they are.
Q. When you took the quick timeout, was that to talk defense primarily?
  COACH  TURGEON: It was just to get their heads in the building. I mean, I just  thought we were totally out of it, weren't doing anything that I had  asked them to do. And I just wanted them to -- I just thought if we  could just start over, it was only 4-0, we could start over, we had  that glossy-eyed look. We weren't executing offensively the way I  wanted them to, weren't guarding the way I wanted them to. Gave up a  lot of easy shots today that we haven't been giving up. 
  Maybe it's  UConn, but we looked totally different today than we've looked the last  month and a half of the season. Give them credit. So I was just trying  to wake them up say, All right, guys, it's 4-0, start over. One  timeout. We'll be okay. UConn was just too good.
Q. Looking back, do you consider this a successful season? Also the  idea that you're only losing Josh among your starters and only two  seniors. 
  COACH TURGEON: I think it was a really, really good year.  I don't want to say great year. I think it was a really, really good  year. 
  I think everybody had us pencilled in the NIT. Obviously our  league's pretty good. Our league's done pretty well. To fight back and  do what we did. I don't want to make a big deal out of our first part  of our Big 12 schedule again, came back to bite me. But it was hard. It  was hard early. We just kept fighting and scratching. 
  This year  worried me coming in. Over the last two years, the players this program  has lost. The thing I'm most proud of is we developed the guys. We  really developed 'em. We became a good basketball team. We just weren't  very good today. 
  But, no, to get 24 wins, not a lot of teams out  there with 24 wins that played the schedule we played. I'm pretty proud  of this group. It's no fun today. We wanted more. You always want more.  But we were consistent. Last year we were so up and down. This year we  were so much more consistent. Even though we didn't look it today, we  were so much more consistent. I liked our fight. I like the way our  program's going. I don't want to get into in connection year yet. I'm  going to miss Josh Carter and Bryson Graham a lot. Josh has had an  incredible career. He was humble. He's going to have a smile on his  face about his career. Bryson Graham didn't get on the floor. Was a  tremendous leader for us. As soon as his knee got healthy, he helped us  in practice a lot. We're going to miss those two guys. We got to get a  lot better, bigger and stronger. We got to get a lot better. We got  some guys that work habits got to get a little bit better in the  off-season. Mentally we got to get a lot better if we want to make --  if we want to be an NCAA tournament team and one-and-done type deal, or  do we want to be a really great program, the guys in the program have  to get a lot better between now and next year. 
  THE MODERATOR: Thank you, coach.
THE MODERATOR: We're joined by Connecticut student-athletes and  Coach Calhoun. Coach, we'll ask you to make an opening statement. 
  COACH  CALHOUN: Well, the first thing I want to say, coming into the game, we  had seen Texas A&M who had won I believe eight out of the last  nine. Beat Texas, beat Missouri. Quite frankly, just swallowed up a  really, really good BYU team. We obviously had great concerns. 
  But  we felt we had a good approach. We tried to cut them off early and  high. Put more ball pressure on them. Guys scored two points, Austrie  becomes a very valuable guy for everybody on our team. Then Stanley  Robinson, Carter is a terrific player, I see he's 3-13. Terrific  defense. And then on the offensive end, they long hedged, doubled our  pick-and-roll, which left Jeff at the foul line. Jeff was just  magnificent in burning those. 
  Obviously, I think the 27 points and  the 8 assists for A.J. was in that special category of players that  we've had who in a big-time game make big-time plays. He was absolutely  special for us. 
  I thought really part of the key when we got in  foul trouble, and we used Stanley Robinson and Gavin, we actually  gained a little bit during that period of time. As Jeff said, they held  the fort. 
  These two guys, 17 wins a couple years ago, at  Connecticut, that's not a great thing to be sometimes. Not anytime, as  a matter of fact. For them to now be in the Sweet-16, where they  belong, in my opinion, and have had just a wonderful season. You know,  they've responded back. You know, last two games, you know, with  Stanley's help now, we have another option to go with Jeff and go with  -- with A.J. Price. And, clearly, Sticks gives us that other guy.  Couldn't be happier the way we played defense. Even though we scored  92, our defense was very impressive, which gave us great offense. Got  the ball up the court. 
  I know Jeff has been begging, he had a  great game against Notre Dame, kind of begging for that breakout game.  He was so important for us, he really was. Jeff, he's been our rock, so  important for us. He was just really, really terrific tonight. So  between the two of them, they were just really special. 
  THE MODERATOR: We'll open it up for the student-athletes.
Q. A.J., how important was it not just to win these games but win them emphatically, like you guys did?
  A.J.  PRICE: I think it was kind of important. It wasn't our goal coming into  the tournament. You know, win by a big margin. We just wanted to come  in and play to the best of our ability. We did that these first two  games and hopefully we can continue that throughout this tournament.
Q. A.J., a lot of people questioned whether or not you deserved a 1  seed. There were thoughts about that at the beginning of this. Winning  the way you have, do you think there's a message being sent? Were you  playing with a bit of a chip on your shoulder? 
  A.J. PRICE: Well,  this should be a message sent, showing we are a good team. We've had a  great year thus far. Throughout the year we've proved that we are a  good team. For anyone to question we were a No. 1 seed, I think we  answered those questions by playing hard and showing people that we can  beat good teams. 
  We've beaten them impressively. But, like I said,  it wasn't our goal to come in and try to blow teams out or show anybody  up. We just wanted to come out and play as best as we could play, and  we've done that these first two games.
Q. A.J., you're playing with a great deal of confidence. Can you  tell us what your mindset is like when you have the ball? And your  comfort on the big stage this time of year? 
  A.J. PRICE: Yeah, I am  playing with confidence right now. I feel like I'm a good shooter. I've  put in enough work that I feel like I'm gonna make shots during the  game. And that's just coming with our swagger, a certain swagger that  we talk about as a team. It starts with the point guard, and I think I  bring that. It trickles down through our whole team. We are playing  with that built up confidence. 
  You know, big-time players step up  in big-time games, big-time moments. Jeff Adrien, myself today, we both  played very big today in a big-time game.
Q. Much has been set about the Big East in this tournament. What  makes the Big East such a physical conference with the way you play? 
  JEFF  ADRIEN: There's no other league in the country like the Big East. We  just go out there every game and try to take each other's heads off.  I'm for real when I say that. You see Villanova playing UCLA before.  It's nothing new. It seemed like UCLA wasn't ready for that game. 
  You  know, I think really our conference just prepares us to play games like  this where the physical game, it's nothing to us. It doesn't really  match up to what we've been through during the year. 
  A.J. PRICE: I  think we just have a balance throughout the whole conference of teams  that can do a lot of different things and play a lot of different  styles of basketball. You know, some conferences like to slow it up,  play more physical game. Other conferences are fast-break conferences. 
  Big East, we have a good combination of both. I think we shown that throughout this tournament.
Q. Jeff, how important was it for you to get off to such a good  start? Were you surprised they kept leaving you open in the same spot? 
  JEFF  ADRIEN: It was very important. You know, it was something we've been  talking about coaching staff and myself, just to get me going a little  bit. Guys found me early. I was very surprised after I hit the first  couple jump shots, they was leaving me that open. I just kept shooting  and I was feeling good.
Q. AJ, by far your most enthusiastic and loud fan in your stands is  your mother. You always have a crew of family and friends. What is that  like for you? 
  A.J. PRICE: It kind of feels like my childhood days,  you know. My mother's been around since I started playing basketball.  She's been doing the same thing since I was 12 years old at all my  games, leading the chants, having the fan base just riled up and things  like that. So it feels good. 
  You know, it makes me happy to see her happy. Make my family proud, as well. 
  THE MODERATOR: Thank you, guys. We'll continue with questions for Coach Calhoun.
Q. Can you talk about how proud you are of these guys to be able to  do what they did with you being hospitalized, all that surrounded that,  the preparation that went into it?
  COACH CALHOUN: Well, I mean, I  had an awful lot of pressure after what George did the other day. So I  was hoping that we'd score and play defense. 
  But, no, after we  lost to Syracuse in that six-overtime game, we tried to simplify  everything. Doesn't mean we eliminate a lot of things. We get back to  what we do well. We were playing pick-and-rolls a little different,  doing different kind of things. We're doing that more because we really  needed, we thought, to play much better defense without Jerome Dyson,  who has been so valuable for us in the first 24 games. 
  But I think  that Stanley has now become a factor offensively. Every time you have  more options when you get foul trouble, he's not taking the place, we'd  like to have them both, but that's helped us alleviate a lot of our  problems, at least in these two particular games. 
  I couldn't be  happier for a group of kids. We've had some incredibly talented kids  playing at UConn. This is a talented group. A great chance for A.J.  People questioned me, Do you still think he has his quickness? The best  way right now is probably ask Texas A&M, who by the way is a very,  very good basketball team. We just took them out of everything they  did. We worked so hard on every one of their sets, getting through and  getting extra help. I thought we hedged very well. We covered very  well. Hasheem didn't have a particularly good game. Yet we were still  able to put an impressive performance against a very good basketball  team. 
  Mark does a great job with them. I thought we just locked  them up early defensively and made the game so much more comfortable  for us to play when we had no fear that they were going to score 'a ton  of points' with any shot duration.
Q. You're starting to play with a full deck offensively. Can you tell us how that changes a team?
  COACH  CALHOUN: Well, I think if you work hard enough, and the kids still  don't get Stanley enough on the curl cut, because when he gets the  ball, he's relentless in and around that lane. We've got to develop  that more. They had that, for example, in certain ways where Jerome got  the ball. So we're trying to make him somewhat that piece. We're trying  to obviously take advantage of the quickness going to the hole of  Kemba, and it's taking time. 
  Are we there? Well, the good news is  we've got games more to find that out. But for this team to get to the  Sweet-16, frankly, with the kind of season. The reason we're a No. 1  seed is based on the body of our work. It goes back to Gonzaga. It goes  back to every single thing we do. I would not have been a coach who  complained because we lost one of the best players in the league. And  yet we've been able to rebound and now win some basketball games,  certainly impressively without him. Chattanooga is a good team, I  really like Texas A&M. We were able to lock them up. I think Mark  mentioned how many times got to the foul line, we tried to attack them  as much as we possibly could, their big guys, guards particularly. We  got a special performance out of Jeffrey and A.J., was special. We're  talking so much about Hasheem, and yet I normally wouldn't think we  could do what we did without Hasheem being a dominant force. He still  is a factor around the rim. People miss shots. But tonight he was not  the kind of factor he's been for most of the season. Yet we came away  with a very, very impressive win. I'm proud of them, very happy for  them, and can't wait quite frankly to go out and play now in the  Sweet-16.
Q. You mentioned the other day the '06 team started thinking about  other things. Losing Jerome, what happened with you the other day, can  the reverse work for this team, that their focus becomes honed because  of other things that have gone on?
  COACH CALHOUN: It's a terrific  evaluation 'cause I think this particular team, because they kind of  hold onto each other, they've kind of been said, You aren't like some  of the other teams. But they are. They're really good. When you win 29  basketball games and lose 4, and you had one of your best players go  down seven or eight games before then, they're good. We're really good. 
  Are we special yet? No. Couple more wins from that. There's no  guarantees in this deal. But we played two very impressive games. I  know, once again, particularly defensively, we've played very, very  good basketball. We gave up 25% first game against Chattanooga. Today  in the first half, when it really counted, gave up 35%. Our defense has  still been constant for us. We cleaned up the rebounds where they had a  lot of offensive rebounds in the first half, they had two the second  half. We were harping on the kids about that. I thought we played great  defense. We flowed the ball offensively. When A.J. gets going like  that, I mean, it puts a lot of pressure object a team because we have  some big kids that can finish plays. Gavin Edwards was there to do that  today. This is kind of a nice moment for me. As I said, this team  brought me a great deal of joy. 
  I truly believe that they're  really, really focused on being the best they can be. I told them that,  you know, you're 40 minutes away from Phoenix. That's all you are. Take  us a little longer to get there next week. But you're 40 minutes away.  What you need to do is do the same things you did against Chattanooga,  just do them a little quicker, a little better, and we're going to be  just fine. And quite frankly, we played pick-and-rolls, all the other  various things we had to face, the exact same way.
Q. You mentioned you were glad these guys were back in the Sweet-16  where they belonged. A.J. talked about swagger. How much do you think  this teams that served notice in this tournament that UConn is back,  given the last couple years? 
  COACH CALHOUN: You know, five years  ago we won a national championship, 2006, we were No. 1 team in the  country. So it isn't like we've disappeared from the face of the earth.  But you're right. Being a national player that someone could get to  Detroit, you know, you have to think that we started off that way very  well. Nevertheless, we think we're a national program. We think that  we're going to be there every year and we aspire to do that. 
  Right  now this group that we say hasn't done all that much, you know, has  won, if my math is any good, I think they've won 53 games in two years.  I don't know if most schools think that's pretty good or not. But, you  know, that's not bad. That's not bad. And remember, we're the team that  went to Louisville, when we were whole, and that's the biggest  adjustment we've had to make. We went to Louisville and won by 17. Went  to West Virginia and won there. Notre Dame, broke their 45-game winning  streak when they were playing very well. Won there. This team has lost  one road game all year. It's been a very gritty group. I think the  observation you had very simply is that they really seem to have now  turned the focus. They put aside what happened when Pittsburgh beat us  fair and square, then we had the marathon against Syracuse. We've been  able to bounce back with more focus. You don't know what that's going  to do to a team. We seem to be more focused in doing the small things  that may have cost us the six overtime game. You're on a tightrope, a  40-minute season. I'm proud, happy, and it's great to see some of the  other teams play so well in our league. It's nice to be 16 again.
Q. How did you feel out there? You've been in the hospital. Seemed like you were back to doing your thing on the sideline. 
  COACH  CALHOUN: Well, you know, I think I was my usual. I yelled a couple  things out (laughter). My wife will tell me about them later. 
  But  our kids were playing so well, a lot of it took encouragement. I  explained to them one time we were the ones who were 80 and they were  the ones that were 62. We just had a little problem with that. We  played so well. It was not a game where I had to get them going. They  were very focused on their own. They came in really with a purpose. I  don't think it's a chip, but it's a purpose, no question. They feel,  people say, Connecticut got in because of what they did all year.
  You're  a hundred percent right. I'm the first one to admit that. And they're  not quite the same team. A hundred percent right on that. But maybe,  just maybe, we can be as good a team, 'cause we during the season have  been really good. The last two games we've been pretty good in those  games, too.
Q. Is there anything you will look at over the next four days and say, "That's got to be better?
  COACH  CALHOUN: I think there will be a lot of things. Regardless of the  circumstances, you keep stepping up in class. The reason you keep  stepping up in class doesn't always have to do with the opponent that  you face. It has to do with the situation. They've won two games, feel  very good about themselves, have a swagger, regardless of what happened  beforehand, and are probably very, very good. 
  So anybody who  advances goes back to the campus, is praised and feels very good about  itself. So now you have to step up in class. I still remember back in  '99 when we faced an Iowa team that -- a team we thought we could  out-quick. We were very fortunate to beat them. We faced Gonzaga for  the ultimate game in the round of eight and got to the Final Four. I  think my point is, you keep stepping up in class. It's obviously a  reflection of the team whose are playing well at this particular time.  But I still think it's a reflection of the tournament. The tournament,  it feeds you. It's a self-fulfilling kind of thing where it feeds you  and makes you feel better about yourself. Therefore, generally  speaking, you have the ability to play better.
Q. I think you said Wednesday that you were going to have a heart to  heart talk with Jeff Adrien, things happened Wednesday night into  Thursday, so you probably didn't. Have you talked to him since heart to  heart?
  COACH CALHOUN: Yeah. Jeff is a terrific player. He just  wasn't doing all the things that we felt he was capable of. I think  today, which helped us quite frankly, and a lot of teams it wouldn't  help, when they double-teamed the pick-and-roll, he rolled back to the  foul line. We told him they elongate that hedge, get the ball out of  A.J.'s hands. After he made two or three of those jump shots, his whole  game was entirely different. But we had talked about that, that this  could be the kind of game. They're going to elongate that, slip that,  get to the foul line. You're going to find yourself wide open.
Q. With Stanley, after everything he went to to get back, do you feel he's coming into his own again? 
  COACH CALHOUN: A, I think so. And, B, tomorrow at mass I'll pray so. 
  I  mean, I just think that he's put together a 28, a 24, now not only a  good offensive performance, but a great, offensive performance. Carter  can play. We looked at enough tape of Carter, Blaney told me, he's Sam  Young like in the sense he can make threes and do things. He was 3-13  today. Obviously we did a great, great job. 1-6 from three. Stanley was  just great on him. That's why I wanted to keep him in the game as long  as we possibly could. 
  Yes, he could fill that void. When a coach  goes into a game, he wants as many options as he possibly can have  because somebody gets in foul trouble, someone isn't having a  particularly good game. The more guys that can step up for you, the  better chance you have of winning. As I said, I thought a key period,  granted the key period is the open part of the game, we played great  defense. The second key period, could have got down 13-12, when we had  both Jeff and Hasheem sitting where I didn't want them to sit - beside  me - which they didn't want either. We had to go small a little bit  with Gavin and with Stanley Robinson at the four spot. Yet we were able  to do that. 
  Once again, Texas A&M is a good team. I can see  why they won their tournament. They have very good players. By the way,  we also got them in foul trouble. You didn't see the true Texas A&M  team. Without question, Coach Turgeon is one of those young rising  guys. Just look at his record back at Wichita and so on. They're  well-coached. They get in foul trouble tonight and they face a team  that really had good focus and purpose tonight. 
  THE MODERATOR: Thank you, coach.


 











